The Comfort of ThingsThe diversity of contemporary London is extraordinary, and begs to be better understood. Never before have so many people from such diverse backgrounds been free to mix and not to mix in close proximity to each other. But increasingly people's lives take place behind the closed doors of private houses. How can we gain an insight into what those lives are like today? Not television characters, not celebrities, but real people. How could one ever come to know perfect strangers? Danny Miller attempts to achieve this goal in this brilliant exposé of a street in modern London. He leads us behind closed doors to thirty people who live there, showing their intimate lives, their aspirations and frustrations, their tragedies and accomplishments. He places the focus upon the things that really matter to the people he meets, which quite often turn out to be material things, the house, the dog, the music, the Christmas decorations. He creates a gallery of portraits, some comic, some tragic, some cubist, some impressionist, some bleak and some exuberant. We find that a random street in modern London contains the most extraordinary stories. Mass murderers and saints, the most charmed Christmas since Fanny and Alexander and the story of how a CD collection helped someone overcome heroin. Through this sensitive reading of the ordinary lives of ordinary people, Miller uncovers the orders and forms through which people make sense of their lives today. He shows just how much is to be gained when we stop lamenting what we think we used to be, and instead concentrate on what we are becoming now. He reveals above all the sadness of lives and the comfort of things. |
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LibraryThing Review
Gebruikersrecensie - JenneB - LibraryThingHmm, this wasn't quite what I expected, I guess. I think I thought it would be more obviously anthropological, with more distance between the writer and subjects...but still I enjoyed it for what it ... Volledige review lezen
LibraryThing Review
Gebruikersrecensie - chrisleeclark - LibraryThingA fascinating anthropoligical study of households in a single street in contemporary London in which cosmologies that govern lives in other cultures and in other times, such as religion and sociology ... Volledige review lezen
Inhoudsopgave
Prologue | 1 |
Portrait 1 EMPTY | 8 |
Portrait 2 FULL | 18 |
Portrait 3 A POROUS VESSEL | 32 |
Portrait 4 STARRY GREEN PLASTIC DUCKS | 46 |
Portrait 5 LEARNING LOVE | 57 |
Portrait 6 THE ABORIGINAL LAPTOP | 67 |
Portrait 7 HOME AND HOMELAND | 73 |
Portrait 17 HEROIN | 162 |
Portrait 18 SHI | 171 |
Portrait 19 BRAZIL 2 ENGLAND 2 | 179 |
Portrait 20 A THOUSAND PLACES TO SEE BEFORE YOU DIE | 186 |
Portrait 21 ROSEBUD | 193 |
Portrait 22 THE ORIENTALIST | 201 |
Portrait 23 SEPIA | 207 |
Portrait 24 AN UNSCRIPTED LIFE | 217 |
Portrait 8 TATTOO | 83 |
Portrait 9 HAUNTED | 90 |
Portrait 10 TALK TO THE DOG | 100 |
Portrait 11 TALES FROM THE PUBLICANS | 108 |
Portrait 12 MAKING A LIVING | 117 |
Portrait 13 McDONALDS TRULY HAPPY MEALS | 125 |
Portrait 14 THE EXHIBITIONIST | 133 |
Portrait 15 REBIRTH | 143 |
Portrait 16 STRENGTH OF CHARACTER | 153 |
Portrait 25 OH SOD IT | 227 |
Portrait 26 JOSÉ AND JOSÉS WIFE | 234 |
Portrait 27 WRESTLING | 241 |
Portrait 28 THE CARPENTER | 252 |
Portrait 29 THINGS THAT BRIGHT UP THE PLACE | 260 |
Portrait 30 HOME TRUTHS | 274 |
Epilogue IF THIS IS MODERN LIFE THEN WHAT IS THAT? | 282 |
Appendix THE STUDY | 298 |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
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